US6007960A - Process for producing a colored image with reduced dot gain and colored image obtained thereby - Google Patents
Process for producing a colored image with reduced dot gain and colored image obtained thereby Download PDFInfo
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- US6007960A US6007960A US08/842,791 US84279197A US6007960A US 6007960 A US6007960 A US 6007960A US 84279197 A US84279197 A US 84279197A US 6007960 A US6007960 A US 6007960A
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- G—PHYSICS
- G03—PHOTOGRAPHY; CINEMATOGRAPHY; ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ELECTROGRAPHY; HOLOGRAPHY
- G03F—PHOTOMECHANICAL PRODUCTION OF TEXTURED OR PATTERNED SURFACES, e.g. FOR PRINTING, FOR PROCESSING OF SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; MATERIALS THEREFOR; ORIGINALS THEREFOR; APPARATUS SPECIALLY ADAPTED THEREFOR
- G03F3/00—Colour separation; Correction of tonal value
- G03F3/10—Checking the colour or tonal value of separation negatives or positives
- G03F3/102—Lamination or delamination method or apparatus for colour proofing systems
Definitions
- the invention relates to a process for producing a coloured image for the colour proofing of originals for multicolour printing, a layer material to carry it out, and a coloured image obtained thereby.
- Such a coloured image is generally produced to assist a printer in checking and, if necessary, correcting the colour separations which will be used in exposing the printing plates in multicolour printing.
- This colour-proofing image has to be a consistent duplicate of the desired halftone or line image. The proof should reproduce the tonal values of the colours naturally and identically with the later printed image.
- Each primary colour image is produced by exposing and developing a light-sensitive layer, the method of development employed being either washing off or peeling off a support film.
- Dot gain is the enlargement of the halftone dot in printing compared with the film original.
- Physical dot gain is an actually measurable enlargement of the halftone dot during the printing process, which depends on various parameters, for example the nature of the printing paper, the nature of the printing ink, the nature of the press and also the nature of the printing plates, etc.
- Optical dot gain by contrast, has its cause in light scattering and absorption properties (shadow effect). The actual dot size does not change.
- Optical dot gain depends on the texture and opacity of the paper and in the case of the colour-proofing image additionally on any adhesive and release layers present. In offset printing dot gain is depending on the parameters mentioned about 8-30% in the mid tones, i.e. at about 40-50% coverage of the halftone. Low dot gains are preferred for high quality prints because of the higher sharpness of image.
- the colour-proofing image production materials described in the cited references consist of a plurality of layers on temporary support films.
- Colourless release and/or adhesive layers are the cause in the ready-produced colour-proofing image of an optical dot gain which generally amounts to about 20-25%.
- the dot gain in the colour-proofing image can be controlled by the thickness of the adhesive or release layers, as described for example in U.S. Pat. No. 4,262,071 and EP-A 339860.
- the possibility of reducing dot gain by means of thin adhesive layers is restricted by processing difficulties, which necessitate an increase in the lamination temperature or a reduction in the lamination speed.
- a further possible way of reducing dot gain is to add white pigments, for example titanium dioxide, to the adhesive layer of the colour films or to the image-receiving material.
- white pigments for example titanium dioxide
- the titanium dioxide is added to the adhesive layer of the colour films, only the colour film for the first primary colour image can in each case be provided with such a TiO 2 -containing adhesive layer, since, in the following layers, the white pigment would affect the colour.
- the sequence of colours in the construction of the image is disadvantageously predetermined and, what is more, only a small reduction in the dot gain is achieved.
- Such a material is described in EP-A 420675.
- TiO 2 it is also possible to use barium sulphate, calcium carbonate or titania-containing pearl lustre pigments described in EP-A 186902.
- the white pigment may also be applied to the image-receiving material as an additional primer layer, described in EP-A 639736.
- the primer layer has in this instance to be constructed of two layers--an adhesive layer and a layer containing the white pigment.
- the present invention describes a process using as the image-receiving material for a colour-proofing image a support consisting of film or paper coated with a light-sensitive layer in which gas bubbles form on irradiation.
- the photolytically produced gas remains in the layer and gives it an opaque appearance on heating.
- the heating necessary to develop the gas bubbles can preferably also take place simultaneously with the lamination of the 1st primary colour image.
- the order of the primary colour images is freely choosable.
- Materials according to the invention known as vesicular film, are described for example in EP 038016. If the vesicular layer is applied to a paper support, the colour-proofing image obtained is particularly similar to the print outcome to be simulated.
- the preferred embodiment of the process of the invention comprises first preparing a layer material consisting of a temporary support (1) and a vesicular layer (2).
- the temporary support (1) preferably consists of polymer or polymer-coated specialty paper.
- the composition of vesicular layer (2) is described for example in EP-B 038016, FR-A 2 304 944, U.S. Pat. No. 3,622,336 and DE-A 2 438 157. It preferably includes a binder having a glass transition temperature of max. 130° C., so that the development temperature is max. 150° C.
- Such preferred binders include for example copolymers of methacrylo-nitrile and vinylidene chloride.
- the light-sensitive compounds used for the vesicular layer (2) are preferably diazonium compounds which evolve nitrogen on irradiation.
- diazonium salts which form a vesicular layer on exposure and development.
- the vesicular layer (2) on the temporary support (1) is uniformly exposed to UV light until the light-sensitive compound has completely decomposed.
- diazonium compounds When diazonium compounds are used, the decomposition is evidenced by the disappearance of the yellow colouring.
- Ga-doped UV light sources having a power of 5 kW are used together with diazonium salts, for example, just a few seconds (20 s) are sufficient for complete decomposition. Longer exposure times are uncritical.
- the exposed vesicular layer (2) has laminated onto it a colour-proofing film (F) under heat and pressure.
- the colour-proofing films preferred for the process of the invention consist of a temporary support (3), a light-sensitive colour layer (4) and an adhesive layer (5). Such materials are described for example in EP-A 352 055, U.S. Pat. No. 4,895,787, U.S. Pat. No. 5,049,476 and EP-A 525 624.
- the colour-proofing film is laminated onto the vesicular layer (2) with the adhesive layer (5).
- the lamination temperature is preferably sufficiently high for the vesicular layer to be thermally developed in the course of this lamination process and at the same time for the adhesive layer (5) to soften, to form a composite of colour-proofing film and vesicular layer.
- the lamination temperature is 120° C. This method is preferred since it does not require an additional operation to develop the vesicular layer.
- the vesicular layer can also be thermally developed in some other way, for example in an oven, before the lamination of the first colour-proofing film.
- the light-sensitive layer (4) of the colour-proofing film is subjected to imagewise exposure through the support film (3) underneath a colour separation film before or preferably after lamination and developed after lamination onto the vesicular layer (2).
- This colour-proofing image has the advantage of lower dot gain over a colour-proofing image produced directly on a polymer-coated paper as support (1).
- the densities D s and D v are measured with a densitometer.
- Example 1 Preparation of a vesicular film
- a solution having the following composition is cast onto a biaxially oriented, 150 ⁇ m thick film of polyethylene
- the layer is dried initially at 70° C. for 60 s and then at 130° C. for 30 s.
- the weight of the dried layer is 8 g/m 2 .
- the film obtained has a yellow colour.
- Example 2 Preparation of colour-proofing films for producing a colour-proofing image according to the invention
- Four light-sensitive colour-proofing films are prepared in the process colours of multicolour printing (cyan, magenta, yellow and black) by first applying coating solutions of the following compositions in each case to a 50 ⁇ m thick, biaxially oriented, heat-set and adhesion-promoted polyethylene terephthalate film and drying. The drying takes place at 70° C. for 2 min.
- the layer weights are 0.4-0.8 g/m 2 ; they are selected so that the densities of a standard multicolour print are later achieved in the ready-produced colour-proofing image.
- Pigments 1.-4. are ball-milled with part of the binder (5.) and of the solvent (8.) before their addition to the respective solution.
- An adhesive solution of the following composition is applied to the dried, light-sensitive colour layers and dried at 100° C. for 2 min.
- the dry adhesive layers each have a weight of 7 g/m 2 .
- Example 3 Preparation of a colour-proofing image on a vesicular film
- the vesicular film of Example 1 is exposed for 20 s in a contact copying frame (5 kW, Ga-doped burner). After exposure, the film no longer shows the typical intensive yellow colouring, but is still transparent.
- the cyan film of Example 2 is laminated with the adhesive-layer side onto the layer side of the exposed vesicular film at 120° C. and under pressure. The vesicular film becomes opaquely white as a result.
- the cyan film of the laminate is subjected to imagewise exposure under a colour separation film (60 lines per cm screen) through its 50 ⁇ m thick support film. The exposure time is chosen so that the tonal value range is 3-98%. After exposure, this support film is peeled off the colour-proofing film. The unexposed areas with the entire adhesive layer remain on the vesicular layer, while the exposed areas of the colour layer are peeled off together with the support film.
- peeling the support film off the colour-proofing film are repeated for the colours magenta, yellow and black.
- a matte or bright protective layer can be applied.
- the colour densities are measured with a commercially available incident light densitometer (D186 from Gretag). A plurality of layers of white paper are used as measuring background. The colour densities can be used to calculate the dot gain according to the equation of Murray-Davies (see page 6). The tonal value range is checked visually using an eye glass. The results are shown in Table 1.
- Example 4 Colour-proofing image on a support material without vesicular layer
- Example 2 The colour-proofing films of Example 2 are laminated in succession in the same order as in Example 3 onto a polymer-coated specialty paper (Ozasol® TF01) instead of onto a vesicular film, exposed and developed. Exposure is carried out in such a way that the tonal value range of every colour is identical in Example 3 and Example 4; only then are the dot gains comparable. Again the dot gains of the primary colours are determined in the ready-produced colour-proofing image. The results are shown in Table 2:
- Example 5 Preparation of a paper support with vesicular layer
- a solution of the following composition is applied to the polymer-coated specialty paper of Example 4 (Ozasol® TF01) and dried. Drying is 1 min at 70° C. The layer weight is about 10 g/m 2 .
- the support obtained has a yellow colour on the vesicular layer side. After exposure, which is carried out in the manner described in Example 3, the yellow colouring disappears.
- This support can either be used directly for preparing a colour-proofing image or else be first provided with an additional adhesive layer to ensure better adhesion of the image.
- a layer of the following composition is applied to a further temporary support film consisting of biaxially oriented and heat-set polyethylene terephthalate without adhesion promotion and dried. The weight of the dried layer is 20 g/m 2 .
- This adhesive-layer film is laminated with the layer side face down onto the specialty paper coated with the exposed vesicular layer.
- the support film of the adhesive-layer film is peeled off; the additional adhesive layer remains on the vesicular layer, which was thermally developed at the same time as the lamination of the additional adhesive-layer film.
- Example 6 Preparation of a colour-proofing image on a paper support with vesicular layer
- a colour-proofing image is prepared on the specialty paper of Example 5, provided with an exposed vesicular layer and additional adhesive layer, analogously to Examples 3 and 4 by lamination, exposure and peeling off of the four colour-proofing films, and the dot gain is measured in the ready-produced proof.
- the values obtained are compared with those obtained in the case of a proof on TF01 without vesicular layer but (for reasons of comparability) with the additional adhesive layer of Example 5. The results are shown in Table 3.
- the comparison of the values shows a reduction in the dot gain due to the vesicular layer by 1-7% at a coverage of 40% and by 0-1% at a coverage of 80% in the film original.
- the effect is distinctly less with the fourth primary colour image (black) than with the first two primary colour images (cyan and magenta).
- the additional adhesive layer distinctly increases the dot gains in comparison with Example 4 without the action of the vesicular layer.
- the dot gain increase due to additional adhesive layers is known (see page 1 et seq.). With a vesicular layer it is thus possible to utilize the advantages of an additional adhesive layer (for example reduction in dust inclusions during lamination) without the simultaneous disadvantage of a dot gain increase.
- the proof obtained in this example is more similar to the final print result than a colour-proofing image obtained according to Example 3 on a vesicular film.
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- Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
- General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
- Photosensitive Polymer And Photoresist Processing (AREA)
Abstract
Description
______________________________________ Constituents Parts by weight ______________________________________ Copolymer of methacrylonitrile and 12.8 vinylidene chloride (comonomer ratio 70:30) Copolymer of methacrylonitrile and 3.2 vinylidene chloride (comonomer ratio 20:80; Saran ® F310, Dow Chemical) 4-Morpholino-2,5-diisopropoxybenzene- 0.8 diazonium tetrafluoroborate Silicone oil (as flow-control agent) 0.05 2-Butanone 80.0 ______________________________________
______________________________________ Parts by weight Constituents Cyan Magenta Yellow Black ______________________________________ 1. Hostaperm Blue ®B2G 7 (C.I. 74160) 2. Permanent Yellow GR 7 (C.I. 21100) 3. Permanent Carmine 12 FBB (C.I. 12485) 4. Carbon Black 11 (Printex ® 25) 5. Polyvinyl formal 6 18 13 9 (Formvar ® 12/85, Monsanto) 6. 2,3-Bis(4-methoxy- 4 4 4 4 phenyl)quinoxaline 7. Dipentaerythritol 8 8 12 12 pentaacrylate 8. γ-Butyrolactone 44 89 65 90 9. Tetrahydrofuran 200 200 200 200 10. 1-Methoxy-2- 444 489 465 490 propanol ______________________________________
______________________________________ Constituents Parts by weight ______________________________________ Copolymer of vinyl acetate and 50.0 crotonic acid (comonomer ratio 95:5; Mowilith ®CT5, Hoechst AG) Polyvinyl methyl ether (Lutanol ® 1.0 M40, BASF) Water 253.3 Ethanol 24.0 Ammonia solution (25% strength) 5.0 ______________________________________
TABLE 1 ______________________________________ Coverage Dot gain Dot gain Dot gain Dot gain Film (S.sub.1) cyan magenta yellow black ______________________________________ 40% 19 21 17 21 80% 10 13 11 12 ______________________________________
TABLE 2 ______________________________________ Coverage Dot gain Dot gain Dot gain Dot gain Film (S.sub.1) cyan magenta yellow black ______________________________________ 40% 22 24 22 24 80% 12 14 12 13 ______________________________________
______________________________________ Constituents Parts by weight ______________________________________ Copolymer of methacrylonitrile and 18.4 vinylidene chloride (comonomer ratio 70:30) Copolymer of methacrylonitrile and 0.8 vinylidene chloride (comonomer ratio 20:80; Saran ® F310, Dow Chemical) 3-Chloro-4-N,N'-dimethylaminobenzene- 0.76 diazonium hexafluorophosphate Silicone oil (as flow-control agent) 0.03 Citric acid 0.13 2-Butanone 20.0 ______________________________________
______________________________________ Constituents Parts by weight ______________________________________ Polyvinyl acetate (Mowilith ® 30, Hoechst) 25 2-Butanone 75 ______________________________________
TABLE 3 ______________________________________ Cover- age Dot Dot Dot Dot Film gain gain gain gain Support (S.sub.1) cyan magenta yellow black ______________________________________ TF01 + vesicular + 40% 20 17 19 27 adhesive layer TF01 + vesicular + 80% 11 12 12 14 adhesive layer TF01 + adhesive 40% 26 24 23 28 layer TF01 + adhesive 80% 12 13 12 14 layer ______________________________________
Claims (8)
Applications Claiming Priority (3)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
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EP96201079 | 1996-04-23 | ||
EP96201079 | 1996-04-23 | ||
US2150296P | 1996-07-10 | 1996-07-10 |
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US6007960A true US6007960A (en) | 1999-12-28 |
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US08/842,791 Expired - Fee Related US6007960A (en) | 1996-04-23 | 1997-04-16 | Process for producing a colored image with reduced dot gain and colored image obtained thereby |
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Cited By (1)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US20090009701A1 (en) * | 2000-02-29 | 2009-01-08 | Akira Yamaguchi | Light Diffusing Plate and Display Apparatus |
Citations (4)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US4093463A (en) * | 1977-02-22 | 1978-06-06 | Eastman Kodak Company | Water soluble binder overcoat on vesicular element containing N2 -releasing agent |
US4334006A (en) * | 1977-12-06 | 1982-06-08 | Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd. | Peel-apart process for forming relief images |
US4818663A (en) * | 1986-04-15 | 1989-04-04 | Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company | Photographic materials and color proofing system |
US4977070A (en) * | 1986-05-20 | 1990-12-11 | Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company | Transparentizable antihalation layers |
-
1997
- 1997-04-16 US US08/842,791 patent/US6007960A/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
Patent Citations (4)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US4093463A (en) * | 1977-02-22 | 1978-06-06 | Eastman Kodak Company | Water soluble binder overcoat on vesicular element containing N2 -releasing agent |
US4334006A (en) * | 1977-12-06 | 1982-06-08 | Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd. | Peel-apart process for forming relief images |
US4818663A (en) * | 1986-04-15 | 1989-04-04 | Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company | Photographic materials and color proofing system |
US4977070A (en) * | 1986-05-20 | 1990-12-11 | Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company | Transparentizable antihalation layers |
Cited By (1)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US20090009701A1 (en) * | 2000-02-29 | 2009-01-08 | Akira Yamaguchi | Light Diffusing Plate and Display Apparatus |
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